I have to be honest with you: This isn't really archaic art. It's just some random stuff I started to draw one day, in the middle of a boring class. It's only that. And then again it's more than that. At first I started doing quick sketches of my teacher or the guys sitting next to me. And after doing this for almost a year I got better at it. I improved. They say practice will often cause that... a certain improvement. If that's the case, I'll continue holding pens and nibs.

December 16, 2013

The Best of Milligan & McCarthy

Half a year ago I was reading Dark Horse’s solicitations and I found “The Best of Milligan & McCarthy”. I had no idea it was a gorgeous, deluxe edition. I just paid attention to the names. I’ve been a big fan of Peter Milligan and Brendan McCarthy for over a decade.As British authors they both honed their abilities in the pages of 2000AD, Milligan as a writer and McCarthy as an artist. Together, they were an amazing creative team. I admired Milligan’s narrative talent in “Dark Night, Dark City” one of my favorite Batman sagas (3 brilliant issues), I was fascinated by his reinterpretation of Shade, the Changing Man for Vertigo in the 90s and I loved his X-Force and X-Statix for Marvel a few years ago. As for McCarthy, his art on some Judge Dredd stories frightened me when I was around 8 or 9 years old; he was that good. Because, you see, there is always a certain degree of madness in McCarthy’s composition, a certain dementia in his designs, and also so much richness in his colors.

For years, I saw the works of Milligan with other artists and the art of McCarthy for other writers. And my wish was to see them together. Turns out, I had missed their greatest collaborations. Luckily for me, Dark Horse editors Mike Richardson and Brendan Wright decided it was about time to rescue some of the most wonderful comics ever published and give them the deluxe treatment they so justly deserved. Announced several months in advance, I was impatient to see the book. When I finally received it I felt like a little boy in Christmas getting the present he had been waiting for the entire year. The edition is beautiful, much better than the deluxe editions from other companies. I had so much fun reading this that I had the need to share with you, my readers, how awesome it was. By now you’ve probably read my reviews on Paradax, Rogan Gosh, Skin, Mirkin the Mystic and Freakwave. But this volume includes many other extraordinary works such as Electro Hoax, Roaring’s Rantin’s, Summer of Love, The Hollow Circus and Sooner or Later.Electro Hoax is a black and white horizontal comic strip that reunites some of Milligan’s wildest and craziest concepts. It’s quite old and here we can see McCarthy working specifically for a black and white publication. This is really the only story in traditional black and white, and later on McCarthy would surprise all his readers with his stunning coloring techniques. Most artists are either good at penciling or inking, some are good at both things, but it’s very rare to find artists that excel at penciling, inking and coloring. McCarthy is one of them.Roaring’s Rantin’s is a hilarious chronicle about two old gay men that live in the post-apocalyptic world of Freakwave. Instead of finding survivors they visit other gay men that are still ‘active’ in their social calendar, and together they have fun in some really bizarre parties that reminds us that this is, indeed, an alternative future. Some lines made me laugh until I started choking: “Stuff ‘n nonsense. I used to twist that silly little arse round me fingers”. And McCarthy’s art is so charming here, intensifying the surrealistic surroundings.

"He was 17 years old, with vinegar on his lips and time on his hands" / "Él tenía 17 años, con vinagre en sus labios y tiempo en sus manos"

Summer of Love is a bittersweet comic strip published in a newspaper that was declared in bankruptcy so the ending is a bit abrupt. The protagonist is a 17-year-old boy that falls in love with a girl that is obsessed with her modeling career. Together, they explore a coast town that receives neither attention nor tourism; lost in the map, this is a place that nobody gives a damn about. The Hollow Circus is a very experimental comic first included in the A1 anthology (Atomeka Press). For some, this may be a very disturbing story about a hunchback with pedophiliac tendencies, but I think this was a conscientious effort on behalf of Milligan and McCarthy to do something disturbing. They both tried something very new, thematically and artistically (here McCarthy’s highly experimental art is similar to Dave McKean’s style).Sooner or Later, finally, is the only one I was familiar with. I had the chance to read the first chapters a couple of years ago (I found them as backups in Fleetway’s edition of Alan Moore’s Halo Jones). Tony Riot and Brendan McCarthy work together as artists, and the result is spectacular.________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

About Me

Comic books are my passion. They are as precious to me as the oxygen I breathe, and perhaps even more. The 9th art has been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. And through the years, this passion kept on increasing, thus turning me into an active participant. I started as a reader and later on I became a full-fledged writer and artist. Indeed I’ve found the perfect way to have twice as much pleasure when it comes to comics: I can either read them or write and draw them. And I absolutely love doing both!